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Comment Re:70% of the budget (Score 1) 160

Most of the western EU countries are already 90% of the way to GDPR compliance with their existing Data Protection legislation.

GDPR will cost large corporations money for failing to comply, again they should be mostly compliant anyway thanks to existing legislation. GDPR just harmonises it all and gives powers back to individuals.

Comment Re:Do we trust the legal system? (Score 1) 160

The UK has a constitution. It's just not a single, written document.

Brand new countries (like the USA, relatively speaking) can easily codify their constitution into a single item. But for the ones that have been around in one form or another for over a thousand years, it's harder to scrap the unwritten constitution and create a new one.

Comment Re:This couldn't possibly matter less (Score 1) 131

I made this same mistake in the UK when the Brexit vote happened....

I thought "who would possibly vote for this nonsense" - I live in one of the 7 or so large cities in the country and mistakenly projected my experiences onto the population at large.

I forgot about the other 60 - 70% of the country that lived outside of metropolitan areas, and didn't have a working understand of their wants, hopes, fears or perceptions.

And now we're economically fucking ourselves over, I have taken the time to understand them and where they're coming from.

Comment Re:Slashdot loved Obama Campaigns data analytics (Score 2, Insightful) 137

Jeez there's a lot of Whataboutism on every single article on here these days. Is it new? Or am I just noticing it more?

@Parent: How about you, instead, tell us what you actually think about the mass harvesting, potential abuse, and resale of people's personal information - how does it make you feel? Do you think it's a problem? If so, do you think there are any solutions?

Me? It make me feel very uncomfortable, and I think we need legal mechanisms in place to take control over our data from these parties - even if we misguidedly gave some control away in the past, usually by having our trust betrayed or being bamboozled by small-print and legal linguistics.

Comment No thanks (Score 3, Interesting) 241

This sort of crap is exactly why 1. I'm really glad that legislation like the GDPR in the EU is coming along to begin to allow us to take control of our data. Might not be perfect but a good start. As I read it, this wouldn't be allowed without explicit consent between the owner of the car and whatever advertising company ran this (burying it in an EULA doesn't count)

but simultaneously I'm 2. really annoyed that my dipshit government and uninformed co-citizens voted to take my country out of the EU :-( at least we'll get a few years of the GDPR to see how that works out.

Comment Re:Trading Cards? (Score 1) 106

It's probably only a difference of degrees.

Your local corner shops probably didn't employee addiction specialists, teams of psychologists, design their stores in such a way that subliminally pressured you, buy databases of information about you and harvest even more just in an effort to sell you these things.

Comment Re:LOL wow. (Score 1) 71

You'd need to pass the app's security too. If you're able to do that then yeah, you're right you can go to an ATM and withdraw the money.

You can also do anything else you want with the bank account.

If someone has rooted your phone and has your online banking credentials, this ATM scheme is the least of your problems.

Comment Re:It will be used for the traits that pay the mos (Score 2) 159

CRISPR is already super cheap (in relative terms), it's extremely simple and doesn't require enormous expenditure to set up and run. economies of scale would materialise almost instantly and a minimum wage worker could afford, in a year or two, to give his kids the same advantages rich dickheads do.

It may actually become an equaliser. The lie that we're all born with the same opportunities could be whittled down some and made real by this.

Comment Re:Nice swipe at Google along the way.... (Score 1) 135

So which phone manufacturer is making a profit from mining our data then? Considering that Android connects to Google's services (encrypted of course.), not Samsung or HTC or Huauwei.

Breakdowns of iPhone "R&D" costs and the internal hardware always show an enormous profit margin for them, 69% in the case of the iPhone 6.

That doesn't dilute the value of Tim Cook's arguments though.

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